A bedroom and balcony in the Olympic Village in East London on June 30. The website RemainsOfTheGames.co.uk sells items from the London 2012 Olympic Village residences, including beds, patio chairs, tables and sofas. The "complete superlong extended Olympic" beds, including mattresses, sell for about $235.

LONDON — From the trivial and irrelevant to the inspirational and poignant, everything must go!

As Britain awakes to post-Olympic reality on Monday, sports fans may find solace in the fact that they can buy a piece of the Games on various official auction sites.

Want to buy an implement used in your favorite track and field event?

Sleep where Michael Phelps stretched his 6-foot, 4-inch frame before one of his triumphant races?

Or plug your cable into the power strip used by an Olympic athlete to charge his or her iPad or laptop?

You just may be able to do that.

Subsidizing the cost of the GamesThe decision to sell off the items was made by the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) in an effort to offset the Games' hefty price tag, which ran to about $14 billion in public money. In addition, LOCOG had a smaller budget, just over $3 billion, which was raised through broadcasting rights, ticket sales and merchandising.

The official on-line auction also said it would offer big-ticket items like relay batons from the men's 4x 100 track and field final, balls from the beach volleyball competition and tennis balls such as those used in British gold-medalist Andy Murray’s triumph over Swiss ace Roger Federer at Wimbledon, although none of those appeared to be available Monday morning.

"The Games touched people in such a unique way, they really want a piece of that," Jon Curleigh, Director at Vancouver-based Innovative Sports Limited, the sports marketing company operating the auction, told NBC News. He added that "unprecedented numbers" were bidding for these items.

Curleigh said Innovative Sports guaranteed authenticity through a process that included having workers on the site of the competition, taking the items from officials at venues and placing them in sealed plastic bags, and then transporting them to a secure warehouse.

The memorabilia also comes with anti-counterfeiting and tamper-evident features, he said.

Curleigh could not offer revenue projections because of contractual obligations, but said he expected to generate in the "millions and millions of dollars."

He noted that in previous Olympics these items would be dispersed by the various sporting bodies, but this enabled people to take home a piece of the Games.

"There was never a way for the public to access these items previously. They’ve never been available to the public before so there was no way of assessing the value. So an auction was the fairest way to do this," he said.

He also noted that the resale of such items was consistent with the London Games' message of sustainability. "This way everything finds a home. These items get a second life," he said.

The London 2012 Olympics ran from July 27 to Aug. 12. The London 2012 Paralympics will be held in the same facilities from Aug. 29 to Sept. 9.

Collectors' itemsSome of the products on Memorabilia.London2012.com clearly fall into the category of collectors' items for the sports-obsessed.

Fans can bid for the U.S. flag waved during the Opening Ceremonies; various implements used in track and field events such as a discus, hammer and javelin; judges' scoring sheets from the men's 91-kg. (200-lb,) gold-medal boxing bout; and clothing signed by Olympic athletes.

Still others offered to sell crumpled tissues used to wipe seats at Olympic events and empty bottles from Games events, Reuters reported.

Own Olympic light fixtures and power cables
A separate site, RemainsOfTheGames.co.uk offers fans "a chance to own fixtures, fittings and equipment used by some of the most famous sporting personalities in the world!"

Want to purchase an extension cord with a universal four-socket used by an athlete to charge his or her iPad? Yeah, RemainsOfTheGames.com has that.

remainsofthegames.co.uk

This power strip could be yours for less than $4.

A shower chair? Yes, you too can sit during your shower on the same stool upon which an Olympian once rested. And that for just around $15.

That site is operated by Australia-based Ramler Furniture, which says it also provided "end-to-end" solutions for other major sporting events including the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games, the Athens 2004 Olympic Games and the Melbourne, Australia, 2006 Commonwealth Games.

"The vast majority of the products have been used in some ways, in some venue or other, during the Games," Paul Ramler, the U.K. representative of Ramler Furniture, told NBC News.

The post-Games sale was part of Ramler's contract with LOCOG, according to Ramler. In effect, Ramler had rented the items to the Olympic organizers for the Games and now was buying them back for resale to the public.

"The big difference this time is that the sale was marketed before the Games. In the past, it didn't begin until afterward," he said.

Open-air stadium

Refreshed seats

Workers remove seats as they begin the renovation of the Maracana Stadium ahead of the 2014 World Cup in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Aug. 24, 2010.
(Felipe Dana / AP)
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Hot temperatures

Locals and tourists enjoy Ipanema Beach in Rio de Janeiro, on July 25, 2012. An unusual 32° C (89.6° F) winter temperature is hitting the city which, according to experts, is due to a warm Amazon mass that prevents the cold front from the south from arriving.
(Vanderlei Almeida / AFP - Getty Images)
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Riding the waves

A body surfer rides a wave during high tide in Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro on May 22, 2012.
(Christophe Simon / AFP - Getty Images)
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Sky high

A cable car travels to and from Sugarloaf Mountain in Rio de Janeiro, on Aug. 18, 2008. The cable car leads to one of Rio's most visited sites, with 800,000 tourists per year.
(Bruno Domingos / Reuters)
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Urban dwellings

Urban forest

A man walks with his bicycle through the Tijuca Forest in Rio de Janeiro, on July 29, 2012. The National Park of Tijuca is the world's biggest urban forest at 33 square kilometers (12.7 square miles).
(Pilar Olivares / Reuters)
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Walking on the beach

Future Olympic site

Aerial picture taken at the "City of Rock" -- which is to be the site of the future Olympic Village when Rio hosts the 2016 Olympic Games -- on the opening day of the music festival Rock in Rio, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Sept. 23, 2011.
(Vanderlei Almeida / AFP - Getty Images)
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Across the water

General view of the Bridge of Knowledge designed by Alexandre Chan at the entrance to the 2016 Olympic city in Rio de Janeiro on March 20, 2012.
(Christophe Simon / AFP - Getty Images)
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Ipanema in the distance

Birds overfly the Cagarras Islands, five km away from Ipanema Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on May 6, 2010. Several species of marine birds in risk of extinction inhabit the islands making them one of the most interesting spots for tourism in Rio de Janeiro.
(Vanderlei Almeida / AFP - Getty Images)
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Life-size art

A passerby looks at a life-size body sculpture by British artist Antony Gormley, part of the Event Horizon installation, in Candelaria square in Rio de Janeiro's downtown, on August 8, 2012. Gormley's exhibition in the city includes works from Amazonian Field, Critical Mass, Event Horizon and Breathing Room among others.
(Antonio Scorza / AFP - Getty Images)
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An artistic tribute

Artist Jorge Selaron poses while sitting on the staircase he created, the Escadaria Selarón, located between Lapa and Santa Teresa neighborhoods in Rio de Janeiro, on July 27, 2010. Selaron began his project, which is a work in progress, in 1990 with some 2,000 tiles collected from over 60 countries. The Chilean-born artist calls the project a tribute to the Brazilian people.
(Clarissa Cavalheiro / Reuters)
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New transport

Cable cars are seen in front of the Penha church after Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff opened the new transportation system in Rio de Janeiro on July 7, 2011. The cable car system in the Alemao slum is part of the effort to crack down on crime and modernize infrastructure as the city prepares to host 2014 World Cup soccer matches and the 2016 Olympic Games.
(Sergio Moraes / Reuters)
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Favela on a mountainside

A "pacified" favela, or squatter settlement, is seen on a forested mountainside in the mist on June 21, 2012 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Rio de Janeiro's authorities have successfully "pacified" a number of formerly crime-ridden favelas in the city although the expansion of favelas due to a housing shortage has contributed to Rio's rainforest destruction. Many are constructed in the mountains and hillsides that surround the city, resulting in deforestation.
(Mario Tama / Getty Images)
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Surfing

Teenagers walk to ride waves at Arpoador Beach on the final day of the Rio + 20 conference on June 22, 2012 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
(Mario Tama / Getty Images)
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Park with a nice view

Majestic sunrise

Two Urubus fly at sunrise over the "Lagoa" lake of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on June 29, 2012.
(Christophe Simon / AFP - Getty Images)
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Traditional dance

People dance the Jongo, an Afro-Brazilian dance where the samba derives some of its roots from, in Rio de Janeiro, on July 28, 2012. The Jongo ritual is a legacy of African slaves who worked in Brazil's coffee plantations in the 19th century and is celebrated as a tradition mostly in slums and former slaves communities.
(Ricardo Moraes / Reuters)
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Famous aqueduct

Festive celebrations

A dancer of Mangueira samba school parades during carnival celebrations at the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Feb. 21, 2012.
(Felipe Dana / AP)
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A Rio sunrise

Sugarloaf Mountain is silhouetted against the early-morning skies as the sun begins to rise in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the host city for the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development in June 2012. The Earth summit included high-profile talks among some 130 top leaders from nations around the globe.
(Felipe Dana / AP)
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Editor's note:
This image contains graphic content that some viewers may find disturbing.